SEVEN Facts about Betsy Elliott that didn't make it into the book!

When writing a book often an author will create characters sketches, entire backgrounds for characters that don't make it on to the pages but help them to know their character and what makes them tick. It helps with motivation and gives a layer of reality to the character that is helpful when telling their story.

In addition to character sketches, The Forbidden Dreams of Betsy Elliott is set in history & some real historical connections are presented through other characters who were actually real people but are making "cameos" in the story.

Betsy's father, Roland Crane served in World War One. He contracted Spanish influenza but survived unlike fifty million other souls worldwide in 1918 and 1919.

The book is inspired by my grade four teacher, Miss White (now Linda Peckford) after she told me the story of how my grandmother used to bring "a turn of water" from the well, a thirty-minute walk, every day. I built the story around the image of that in my mind.

The horse in the story is actually a Newfoundland pony. In Newfoundland's past, ponies and horses were all referred to as horses. (I spend some time on the council of the Newfoundland Pony Society.

The Newfoundland pony Star in the book was named after the pony my family owned when I was growing up.

Bonus: The story was drafted as I listened to the song The Calendar by Newfoundland and Labrador songwriter Ian Foster.

I hope you enjoyed getting to know Betsy a bit better, and if you haven't read her story yet you can buy her books wherever Flanker Press Ltd sells them and worldwide on Amazon both in paperback and as an ebook. It's also available in other ebook formats like Kobo.